I like this movie...it's always been one of my favorites...it's not a bad movie, it's a 50's sci-fi movie that had alot going for it at the time. Technically, it's a dinosaur however, I love it for the sheer satisfaction that it'sa a movie that I used to see 5 nights in a row on the 60's movie show MILLION DOLLAR MOVIE.

There are classic lines that my friends and I make fun of but the one that always tells me that they didn't pay much attention to detail is the one at the end of the mvoie when Phillip asks Ann if she wants to step outside for a breath of fresh air...............even though they just got done napalming the whole mountain that is now full of char-broiled eyeballs......Breath of fresh air indeed.

I saw this movie when it was first released while living in Navy Housing in Corpus Christi, TX. I think it cost a whole 10 cents. I was about four years old at the time.... This movie scared the holly crap out of me and continued to haunt me for I would guess close to two years later!!! I had constant reoccurring nightmares about this movie, not to mention many a sleepless and scarred stiff nights. I am 52 now and NEVER forgot this movie. I even had to buy a copy a couple of years ago. I watched it and wondered what the heck I was so scared about...

The Crawling Eye was the first scary movie I saw on TV as a young kid. It had to be around the time it was first made, which makes me old. Anyway, it scared me so much I didn't want to go down the hall to bed afterwards and I've been hooked on Sci Fi ever since. Recently, I found it on DVD and loved it just as much as ever.

This one has shown up recently on MonstersHD cable channel. Forgot how it gave me the creeps, too, when I was a kid. Still think they're the most hideous things I've ever seen and in a B movie no less.

Considering it was pretty cheap, how did they make those things with the eye moving and all??

Also, to early posters, don't think this was a Chiller Theater entry. I seem to remember it on Channel 9, probably on Supernatural Theater.

The shot of Glenn Manning spearing a guy with a giant hypo needle is probably my first Horror memory.

But I do have the MST version. Only movie to show up in two episodes. It's been mentioned that the original title was "The Trollenberg Terror". I agree with the thought that such an ambiguous title didn't give away the ending. Who would've expected such a monster, until it was actually revealed?But The Crawling Eye is a perfect Sci-Fi / Horror title, too.

to this day it`s still my favorite all time horror classic. and it did scare the hell out of me when i saw it as a kid....couldn`t sleep that night....i`ve been reading all the comments and a lot of them are so true with my feelings also...i`ve turned so many people on to this movie and everyone loved it...my kids the most when they were small...now every time we see fog it`s also the first comment out of their mouths....and they`re teens now!!!lol....i loved the statements about screw-ups in the movie but didn`t all 50`s movies have screw-ups?????......still wondering how the monster got into the hut without breaking any doors or windows!!!lol....and still wondering how hans got up to the observatory after he left the motel and was infected like brett........my favorite line..." cute little things , aren`t they!!!!!!".....and i do remember it being on supernatural theatre before chiller theatre......was very disappointed when forest tucker died and they listed his accomplishments and this wasn`t one of them...very disappointed......one more.....do want to get the chiller hand stuff......know anywhere i can get it????

I was given a copy of the DVD of CE a couple of years ago, and I must have watched it a dozen times since. I find it incredibly re-watchable. I'm also withdrawing my previous comments on the effects - they're not all that bad. Certainly the excellent sound effects help make up for the creature visuals. But in my repeated viewings I noticed a couple of things:

1. An actual blooper - freeze frame as Janet Munro collapses onto Forrest Tucker in the early train scene, and you'll notice that the newspaper he's been reading is already crumpled up from previous takes of the scene.

2. Intended humor? CE takes itself very seriously. There's really no humor in the film at all - or is there? When the doctor is conducting the examination of the zombified Brett in the basement of the inn, the hotel manager is holding a lamp for him to see by. The "lower... lower... lower... put it on the floor." bit of dialogue has the ring of a scene from "Young Frankenstein" and gets a laugh from me.